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Japan – Quiet Life Deluxe Edition

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In 2019, an extensive reissue campaign of David Sylvian’s solo albums reminded us how far this reluctant star had retreated from the limelight. Who could blame him? Japan found success too late, after they had already decided to split, when personal conflicts became unendurable. It’s a situation...

In 2019, an extensive reissue campaign of David Sylvian’s solo albums reminded us how far this reluctant star had retreated from the limelight. Who could blame him? Japan found success too late, after they had already decided to split, when personal conflicts became unendurable. It’s a situation laid out on “Ghosts”, the exquisitely cold and distant highlight of their fifth and final album, 1981’s Tin Drum. “The ghosts of my life blow wilder than before”, mourned Sylvian, lost somewhere deep inside his own anxieties. But let us remember happier times, where the band’s vision finally coalesced.

Japan had formed in south London during the early ’70s – glam touchstones included the New York Dolls (Sylvian’s real name is Batt), Roxy and Bowie. The early part of their career is full of false starts, including a dismal tour supporting Blue Öyster Cult and two largely ignored albums, Adolescent Sex and Obscure Alternatives (both 1978). But as the decade ended, their lot improved. “The Tenant”, the slow-moving instrumental that closed Obscure Alternatives, was the first of Sylvian’s Satie-inspired piano pieces. Meanwhile, “Life In Tokyo”, a standalone single with Giorgio Moroder, marked their transition away from glam revivalists.

By the time they recorded Quiet Life, Japan had refined a new creative direction – artfully pitched somewhere between the opiated chic of late-period Roxy, the haunting abstractions of Bowie’s Low and The Velvet Underground’s noir glamour.

But despite the swish flourishes of their new sound – sympathetically recorded by Roxy producer John Punter – the songs on Quiet Life seemed to foreshadow Sylvian’s own knotty relationship with fame. “Boys, now the times are changing/The going could get rough”, he sings on the title track. Elsewhere, on “Fall In Love With Me”, Sylvian is stirred from his woozy, Ferry-esque croon and all but howls, “Shy away from standard life/Each bitter moment lingers on”. On “Despair”, meanwhile, he sings of “the artists of tomorrow” who live “in pleasant despair”. It’s an outlook you suspect Sylvian found faintly romantic.

Of course, there is more to Quiet Life than simply David Sylvian’s inward meditations. There is his younger brother Steve Jansen on drums, multi-instrumentalist Mick Karn – with whom Sylvian had a competitive, ultimately damaging relationship – keyboard player Richard Barbieri and guitarist Rob Dean. The title track brilliantly summarises their strengths – Karn’s sinuous fretless bass, Jansen’s metronomic drumming, Dean’s chiming chords and E-bow playing lying beneath Barbieri’s keyboard rises. It impressed Duran Duran so much, they based their entire career around it.

Elsewhere, Quiet Life finds Japan gamely exploring their newfound capabilities. Dean’s Fripp-like runs on “Fall In Love With Me” butt against Karn’s squalling saxophone; “Halloween” pushes the band further towards the cinematic avant pop of Gentlemen Take Polaroids. A polite version of “All Tomorrow’s Parties”, built around Dean’s cyclical guitar lines, is carried by Sylvian’s wistful delivery.

Arguably, Sylvian was more comfortable in the quieter moments. His woozy croon stretches out in the space between the instruments – on “Despair”, say, where he’s accompanied by Barbieri’s keyboard and Karn’s saxophone. He gradually recedes from the song as Barbieri’s chilly atmospherics build into an extended coda modelled on Bowie’s “Warszawa”. Karn’s expressive fretless basslines and Barbieri’s textured synth beds provide Quiet Life with its musical character – as on “In Vogue” or “Alien”, which sweep forward with imperious grace. Starting out as another enigmatic piano piece, the album’s seven-minute closer, “The Other Side Of Life”, develops into a thrilling, widescreen finale, with Sylvian’s baritone rising to meet Barbieri’s swelling synths and sumptuous string arrangements.

Emboldened, Japan maximalised their Quiet Life achievements on Gentlemen Take Polaroids and, finally, the fearlessly ambitious Tin Drum. These three records mark a distinct phase in Sylvian’s career, setting out a path for creative and commercial success that he ultimately rejected in favour of more oblique strategies. His former bandmates similarly found creative outlets outside the mainstream. Quiet Life, though, enabled Japan to get from B to C, and from D to E, and from there to wherever they went next.

Extras: 8/10. A second disc collects 7” and 12” remixes as well as standalone tracks like “Life In Tokyo” and “European Son”. A third disc, recorded live at Japan’s Budokan, captures the band at full tilt.

Q&A
STEVE JANSEN
Quiet Life feels like a band finally working out who they were. What do you think accounted for that?

The first album, and to a large extent the second, was the band’s opportunity to record material it had been touring for a number of years. We took a much more measured approach when recording Quiet Life. We were far more conscious of musicianship and interplay rather than simply a great song. Saying that, the songwriting had started to develop a more sophisticated ‘poetic’ or ‘romantic’ flavour rather than the previous angry, subversive content, and this in turn would have determined a more subtle, expressive approach to the instrumentation.

How important was John Punter’s involvement?
With his knowledge and experience in the studio we felt we had everything in place to really make something we were going to be proud of. We were extremely keen to push ourselves within the creative process of recording.

What was the dynamic like in the studio?
We couldn’t have been happier or more enthusiastic. Each person was focused on their role within the band but also critiqued the others, which was taken on board with good humour and a willingness to grow from the experience.

Looking back, how do you view Quiet Life now?
I think it was our first real statement as a band. I think the songwriting soared ahead in leaps and bounds and the musicianship and attention to detail was the beginning of the road to Tin Drum.

Book Of Romance And Dust by Exit North is out now

INTERVIEW: MICHAEL BONNER

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young announce a 50th anniversary edition of Déjà Vu

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Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young release a 50th anniversary edition Déjà Vu on May 14 via Rhino. Presented in a 12 x 12 hardcover book, it will be released as a 4-CD/1-LP set featuring the original album remastered, plus over two hours of rare and unreleased demos, outtakes, and alternate takes. ...

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young release a 50th anniversary edition Déjà Vu on May 14 via Rhino.

Presented in a 12 x 12 hardcover book, it will be released as a 4-CD/1-LP set featuring the original album remastered, plus over two hours of rare and unreleased demos, outtakes, and alternate takes.

The deluxe vinyl version will also be available with the full content across 5 LPs of 180-gram vinyl. The deluxe vinyl version is available for pre-order now exclusively here.

The music will also be available on digital download and streaming services and in high-resolution audio at Neil Young’s Archives site.

Listen to a previously unreleased demo for “Birds” below:

The tracklisting for the 4-CD/1-LP edition is:

Disc One: Original Album
“Carry On”
“Teach Your Children”
“Almost Cut My Hair”
“Helpless”
“Woodstock”
“Déjà Vu”
“Our House”
“4 + 20”
“Country Girl”
“Whiskey Boot Hill”
“Down, Down, Down”
“Country Girl” (I Think You’re Pretty)
“Everybody I Love You”

Disc Two: Demos
“Our House” – Graham Nash *
“4 + 20” – Stephen Stills *
“Song With No Words (Tree With No Leaves)” – David Crosby & Graham Nash
“Birds” – Neil Young & Graham Nash *
“So Begins The Task/Hold On Tight” – Stephen Stills *
“Right Between The Eyes” – Graham Nash
“Almost Cut My Hair” – David Crosby *
“Teach Your Children” – Graham Nash & David Crosby
“How Have You Been” – Crosby, Stills & Nash
“Triad” – David Crosby
“Horses Through A Rainstorm” – Graham Nash
“Know You Got To Run” – Stephen Stills *
“Question Why” – Graham Nash *
“Laughing” – David Crosby *
“She Can’t Handle It” – Stephen Stills *
“Sleep Song” – Graham Nash
“Déjà Vu” – David Crosby & Graham Nash *
“Our House” – Graham Nash & Joni Mitchell *

Disc Three: Outtakes
“Everyday We Live” *
“The Lee Shore” – 1969 Vocal *
“I’ll Be There” *
“Bluebird Revisited” *
“Horses Through A Rainstorm”
“30 Dollar Fine” *
“Ivory Tower” *
“Same Old Song” *
“Hold On Tight/Change Partners” *
“Laughing” *
“Right On Rock ’n’ Roll” *

Disc Four: Alternates
“Carry On” – Early Alternate Mix *
“Teach Your Children” – Early Version *
“Almost Cut My Hair” – Early Version *
“Helpless” – Harmonica Version
“Woodstock” – Alternate Vocals *
“Déjà Vu” – Early Alternate Mix *
“Our House” – Early Version *
“4 + 20” – Alternate Take 2 *
“Know You Got To Run” *

LP: Original Album
Side One

“Carry On”
“Teach Your Children”
“Almost Cut My Hair”
“Helpless”
“Woodstock”

Side Two
“Déjà Vu”
“Our House”
“4 + 20”
“Country Girl”
“Whiskey Boot Hill”
“Down, Down, Down”
“Country Girl” (I Think You’re Pretty)
“Everybody I Love You”

* previously unissued

Sally Grossman, Bob Dylan cover star, has died aged 81

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Sally Grossman, who appeared on the cover of Dylan's 1965 album Bringing It All Back Home, has died aged 81. Grossman’s niece Anna Buehler confirmed to Rolling Stone that she died in her sleep at home in Woodstock, New York last week (March 10). Born Sally Buehler in Manhattan in 1939, Gross...

Sally Grossman, who appeared on the cover of Dylan’s 1965 album Bringing It All Back Home, has died aged 81.

Grossman’s niece Anna Buehler confirmed to Rolling Stone that she died in her sleep at home in Woodstock, New York last week (March 10).

Born Sally Buehler in Manhattan in 1939, Grossman gravitated to Greenwich Village in the early Sixties. A waitress at the Café Wha! and then the Bitter End she met Albert Grossman. The two married in 1964, two years after Dylan signed a contract which made Grossman his manager. Aside from Dylan, the Grossmans had a significant impact on the careers of Janis Joplin and The Band, among others.

After her husband’s death from a heart attack in 1986, Grossman carried on his legacy by overseeing his legendary studio Bearsville and associated record label Bearsville Records.

Hear Lambchop’s “A Chef’s Kiss” taken from their new album, Showtunes

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Lambchop return with a new studio album, Showtunes, on May 21 via City Slang. You can hear "A Chef's Kiss", the first taster for the album, below. Kurt Wagner describes the track as "a reflection on the temporal nature of life and ultimately of song itself. A 'chef’s kiss', being a gesture towa...

Lambchop return with a new studio album, Showtunes, on May 21 via City Slang.

You can hear “A Chef’s Kiss“, the first taster for the album, below. Kurt Wagner describes the track as “a reflection on the temporal nature of life and ultimately of song itself. A ‘chef’s kiss’, being a gesture toward something perfected or well done, even loved.”

The band have also released a trailer for Showtunes, which is here also.

The follow up to 2019’s This (is what I wanted to tell you), Showtunes also features Ryan Olson, Andrew Broder, CJ Camerieri and Yo La Tengo’s James McNew; the album has been co-produced by Jeremy Ferguson.

Uncut – May 2021

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR The Velvet Underground, The Black Crowes, Bunny Wailer, Richard Thompson, Rhiannon Giddens, Laurie Anderson, Blake Mills, Nick Cave, Postcard Records, Mogwai and The Selecter all feature in the new Uncut, dated May 2021 and in UK...

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR

The Velvet Underground, The Black Crowes, Bunny Wailer, Richard Thompson, Rhiannon Giddens, Laurie Anderson, Blake Mills, Nick Cave, Postcard Records, Mogwai and The Selecter all feature in the new Uncut, dated May 2021 and in UK shops from March 18 or available to buy online now. As always, the issue comes with a free CD, this time comprising 15 tracks of the finest ambient Americana.

THE VELVET UNDERGROUND: With a motherlode of activity planned for this year, we’ve assembled a collection of untold stories and compelling insights on the band who changed everything – those taking part include John Cale, Jonathan Richman, Lenny Kaye, Todd Haynes, Doug Yule and Richard Williams… “Blueprint?” says Cale. “We didn’t want to know…”

OUR FREE CD! Sounds Of The New West Presents: AMBIENT AMERICANA: 15 fantastic tracks from the cream of the cosmic pastoral world, including William Tyler, Steve Gunn, North Americans, Michael Chapman, Chuck Johnson, Dean McPhee, Mary Lattimore, Luke Schneider and more.

This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here – with FREE delivery to the UK and reduced delivery charges for the rest of the world.

Inside the issue, you’ll find:

THE BLACK CROWES: Now reunited, Chris and Rich Robinson look back at their band and the good and bad times around Shake Your Money Maker. But can they keep from falling back into old ways? “This is so important to us – we don’t want to fuck it up…”

BUNNY WAILER: We remember a reggae pioneer who eschewed international stardom with Bob Marley to follow his own spiritual path

RICHARD THOMPSON: The songwriter introduces an exclusive extract from his stunning memoir, Beeswing, as he recalls Fairport Convention‘s transition from a living room in Fortis Green to the stage of the UFO Club

RHIANNON GIDDENS: Locked down in Limerick, the singer and songwriter tells Uncut how her latest album reminds her of home and generations past. “I am the sum of everything that I do…”

LAURIE ANDERSON: With a vinyl reissue of Big Science coming, Anderson discusses lockdown, the joy of “spatial listening” and the new topicality of “O Superman”

AMBIENT AMERICANA: We investigate the growing tide of artists transforming the tools of country music to create innovative, genre-defying sounds, from Chuck Johnson and William Tyler to, even, Bruce Springsteen

BLAKE MILLS: Album by album with the master guitarist and producer

THE SELECTER: The making of “On My Radio”

POSTCARD RECORDS: Alan Horne presents his scrapbook of artefacts and ephemera from the label’s history

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from Nick Cave & Warren Ellis, Ryley Walker, Teenage Fanclub, Sarah Louise, Floating Points with Pharaoh Sanders & The LSO, Samba Touré and more, and archival releases from Neil Young, Bobby Womack, Joe Strummer, Tame Impala, The Who, Ali Farka Touré and others. We catch Mogwai and Judy Collins live online; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Nomadland, He Dreams Of Giants and Mick Fleetwood & Friends’ Peter Green celebration; while in books there’s The Fall, Nick Cave and Alan Warner’s Kitchenly 434.

Our front section, meanwhile, features unseen John Lennon & Yoko Ono, Guy ClarkThe Members, Natalie Bergman and an audience with Peter Murphy while, at the end of the magazine, Steve Cropper reveals the records that have soundtracked his life.

You can pick up a copy of Uncut in the usual places, where open. But otherwise, readers all over the world can order a copy from here.

For more information on all the different ways to keep reading Uncut during lockdown, click here.

Inside the new Uncut: The Velvet Underground and our latest Sounds Of The New West CD

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It seems several lifetimes ago now, but last March, shortly before the first lockdown began, I was lucky enough to see the Andy Warhol exhibition at Tate Modern. Inside Room 6, the curators gamely attempted to replicate the sensory rush of the Exploding Plastic Inevitable: Warhol films and still ima...

It seems several lifetimes ago now, but last March, shortly before the first lockdown began, I was lucky enough to see the Andy Warhol exhibition at Tate Modern. Inside Room 6, the curators gamely attempted to replicate the sensory rush of the Exploding Plastic Inevitable: Warhol films and still images were projected on top of one another, with coloured gels and strobe lights swirling and flickering, and the music of The Velvet Underground playing at full volume.

Have a copy sent straight to your home

With a slew of Velvets activity coming over the summer, we’ve decided to celebrate the band’s many musical revolutions with their first Uncut cover for 12 years. What’s new? Plenty. There are vivid recollections of Factory life from John Cale – his line about “loners clinging onto the vapours of others, in the hopes of being seen for the first time” is basically “All Tomorrow’s Parties” – as well as an in-depth interview with Todd Haynes on his hotly anticipated new documentary about the band. There’s Doug Yule, Lenny Kaye, Brian Eno, too, while Richard Williams revisits his own encounter with the band in a rented flat in, of all places, Knightsbridge. The high point (for me, at any rate) is a splendid, lengthy piece from Velvets superfan Jonathan Richman, who goes deep on the transition from the Cale era to the Doug Yule era. “Was Doug Yule a more conventional player than Cale?” Jonathan asks, in his own inimitable way. “Yes. But, Jimi Hendrix was a more conventional player than Cale!”

Meanwhile, eagle-eyed readers will spot that the free CD this month is part of our ongoing Sounds Of The New West series – this latest, excellent compilation showcases an emerging strand of expansive, mainly instrumental music that joins the dots between country and post-rock, experimental soundscapes. Hopefully, you’ll find Stephen Deusner’s investigations into ambient Americana a useful companion piece to the CD.

There’s more, of course. A rare audience with Postcard Records supremo Alan Horne, Rhiannon Giddens, Blake Mills, The Selecter, Peter Murphy, Steve Cropper, The Black Crowes, The Members, Natalie Bergman, Ryley Walker, Laurie Anderson, Sarah Louise, Teenage Fanclub, Tom Jones, Samba Touré and Jenny Hval, an extract from Richard Thompson’s autobiography, Neil Spencer on his memories of Bunny Wailer, a new Guy Clark documentary and the best new albums and reissues.

It’s a busy month – let us know what you think, either at letters@www.uncut.co.uk or visit us at https://forum.www.uncut.co.uk/.

Take care, as ever.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Valerie June – The Moon And Stars: Prescriptions For Dreamers

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In late Autumn, the Tennessee-born songwriter Valerie June took to YouTube, live from her home in Brooklyn, NY. Seated fireside, and cross-legged, with an acoustic guitar, June wore two pink carnations in her dreadlocked hair and played “Stay”, the first track from her new record. Midway thro...

In late Autumn, the Tennessee-born songwriter Valerie June took to YouTube, live from her home in Brooklyn, NY. Seated fireside, and cross-legged, with an acoustic guitar, June wore two pink carnations in her dreadlocked hair and played “Stay”, the first track from her new record.

Midway through the performance, still strumming, she told how her father had passed away on this very date four years earlier. “He died on the largest supermoon of the year!” June said, beaming, before taking a more philosophical turn: “As we think about impermanence, I’d like to invite all the lights and the spirits that are all around… Invite that energy!”

As album campaign launches go, it was unusual. But The Moon And Stars: Prescriptions For Dreamers is an unusual record, one that draws together a diverse array of influences – guided meditation, Fela Kuti, Sun Ra, Memphis soul, racial oppression, pedal steel and Tony Visconti among them, and somehow weaves them into one of this year’s most exceptional offerings.

June never was wholly predictable. Her first two records – 2006’s The Way Of The Weeping Willow, and its 2008 successor, Mountain Of Rose Quartz, were downhome Appalachian-tinged recordings, trad tales of ramblers, gypsies, crawdads, strung over banjo, guitar and lap-steel. Their freshness came in June’s quite singular voice: an instrument that is somehow radiant yet dusky, sweet yet briny, a marriage of contradiction and delight.

It was 2013’s Pushin’ Against A Stone, produced by The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach, that first showed the full scope of June’s voice, setting it against brass, soul, blues, bluegrass and girl-group cadency, and finding she sounded equally at home in all of them. Four years later, The Order Of Time was a more intimate, half-conversational affair, that voice muted and meandering, but oddly all the more heart-rending for its new restraint. The album drew wide critical acclaim and the admiration of Bob Dylan.

The Moon And Stars feels a more fully realised project, more wide-ranging and self-assured than its predecessors. Its 14 tracks offer a loose lyrical narrative of the path of the ‘dreamer’ – the conjuring of self-belief, the setbacks, the sorrows, the strength to rise again. In and between, June introduces moments of sonic contemplation that on first listen prove unexpected; it is a brave album that follows its opening track with a 55-second wordless meditation – a wind-chimed, otherworldly deep breath before the heart-thumping, percussive scurry of “You And I”.

If this seems like mere affectation, it should be noted that June regards this album as something of a personal manifesto; a statement about her own dream of making music, and the sheer determination it has at times taken to continue. Accordingly, she sought to imbue the recording process with a sense of ritual – the studio bedecked with fresh flowers (a nod, apparently, to the writer Clara Lucas Balfour’s claim that flowers are “the stars of the earth”), sessions booked to coincide with the full moon, and any number of other attempts to bring an air of poetic ceremony.

It’s not wholly outlandish to say that these acts of blessing can be heard on these songs. There is a startling iridescence to this record, there in its shimmers of flute, organ, mbira, Mellotron; in the bright guitar of “Fallin’”, the incantatory quality of “Within You”, in the transcendental tones that Jack Splash (Alicia Keys, Kendrick Lamar, John Legend), co-producing with June, brought to its palette.

At the heart of the album a brief track named “African Proverb” presents the adage “Only a fool tests the depth of the water with both feet”. The line is delivered by Stax legend and Queen of Memphis Soul, Carla Thomas, who provides guest vocals on the song that follows, “Call Me A Fool”. The meeting of June and Thomas’s voices is one of the album’s great treasures; one Tennessee singer handing the baton to another, perhaps, or Thomas’s presence at the very least suggesting that at one point she made a young, black, Memphis woman’s dream of musical success seem more tangible.

June has previously noted her admiration for Oprah Winfrey, and close examination of the lyrics here might seem to suggest a familiarity with the Winfrey school of self-empowerment: “The thought is the intention”, she sings on “Stay”, or as she states on “Home Inside”: “Earth is a school/To shine is why you came”. Such is June’s gift, however, that her voice is capable of turning the potentially platitudinous into the profound.

In the past, June’s singing has been likened to that of Wanda Jackson, Shirley Goodman, Erykah Badu, but if there is a more obvious vocal comparison it is arguably Van Morrison; June and Morrison’s voices share a similar mingling of the sour and the sublime, a scattish propensity for dismantling a word, finding each catch and elongation, the better to convey its emotion. On previous records she captured, both vocally and musically, something of the Saint Dominic’s Preview-era Morrison. On The Moon And Stars, there is more of the sense of wonder and fiery vision of Astral Weeks.

Certainly it shares much of that record’s multi-instrumentalist experimentation. June’s album begins with warm, bright piano and ends in singing bowl, mockingbird, Native American flute, along the way drawing on the string arrangements of Lester Snell (Isaac Hayes, Al Green, Solomon Burke) and the extraordinary percussive talents of Humberto Ibarra. To listen to it feels at once mind-expanding and all-encompassing.

Its idiosyncratic rhythms, moments of density and sudden space, also carry some of the strange tempos of these times: a year in which life seems to move in fits and starts, when there has been world enough and time for contemplation, rumination, dreams.

The album captures, too, some of the tectonic cultural shift of the past year. June, who in the lead-up to the US election curated a voter mobilisation livestream featuring Brittany Howard, Rhiannon Giddens and Black Pumas, has said that the track “Smile” is a statement of how, as a black woman, she believes that “positivity can be its own form of protest” – something that can never be taken from the oppressed.

Certainly, releasing an album about a return to the importance of dreaming just as the American dream stands at its most tarnished seems something of a radical act. Make no mistake, these songs are beguiling, comely, sweet; but beneath their resonant beauty, June has given us an album that is powerfully, elegantly subversive.

Bob Dylan With Special Guest George Harrison – 1970: 50th Anniversary Edition

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On his return from the Isle Of Wight festival in September 1969, Bob Dylan moved himself, his wife and their three children – Sara was heavily pregnant with a fourth – from Woodstock to Greenwich Village. Settling into a townhouse on MacDougal Street, he tried to reconnect with the sort of life ...

On his return from the Isle Of Wight festival in September 1969, Bob Dylan moved himself, his wife and their three children – Sara was heavily pregnant with a fourth – from Woodstock to Greenwich Village. Settling into a townhouse on MacDougal Street, he tried to reconnect with the sort of life he had known after first arriving in New York from Minnesota. Early in 1970 he began recording the tracks that would not only complete Self-Portrait in time for a June release but provide the material for New Morning, which made its appearance in October. There would be enough left over for Columbia Records to issue a rag-bag album called Dylan in 1973 in response to his defection to David Geffen’s Asylum label.

All that activity, achieved in 10 sessions between March and August, resulted in some of his most widely reviled music. He even reviled it himself, with brisk thoroughness, in the pages of Chronicles Vol 1: “I just threw whatever I could think of at the wall and whatever stuck, released it.” So much for Self Portrait. He was barely kinder to New Morning, even though it was hailed in some quarters as a return to the truth path: “Maybe there were good songs in the grooves and maybe there weren’t – who knows? But they weren’t the kind where you hear an awful roaring in your head. I knew what those kind of songs were like and these weren’t them.”

In that mood, goodness knows what he would make of this latest archival trawl. Collecting further offcuts and floor-sweepings from those sessions in a compilation originally given a very limited release as part of his management’s continuing exercise in extending his copyright holdings, it acts as an appendix to Vol 10: Another Self Portrait (1969-1971), released in 2013.   

The more perspective we gain on the long arc of Dylan’s career, the more clearly we understand his lifelong habit of trying things out, discarding some discoveries, metabolising others. This is his own process, beholden to no-one, enabling him not just to converse with the spirits of all those who went before but to commune with himself, reshaping his gleanings into 60 years’ worth of self-expression.

The 74 tracks included in these three CDs, recorded at 10 separate sessions between March and August, are not the work of a man gripped by inspiration. In scale they range from isolated fragments to several absorbing takes of a song – “Went To See The Gypsy” – on its way to near-greatness. There are covers, from a single verse of Buffy Sainte-Marie’s “Universal Soldier” to a mercifully truncated stab at Jay And The Americans’ “Come A Little Bit Closer”, via an ardent version of Eric Andersen’s “Thirsty Boots”, an intense but sludgy “Long Black Veil”, a likeable “Come All You Fair And Tender Ladies”, “Can’t Help Falling In Love” touchingly crooned against Al Kooper’s funeral-parlour organ, and a cheerful “Jamaica Farewell” that most clearly reveals the presence of the heavy cold that affected his singing throughout the New Morning sessions. “Spanish Is The Loving Tongue”, with David Bromberg on guitar, sits somewhere between the sublime voice-and-piano take used on the B-side of “Watching The River Flow” and the kitsch flourishes of the band-and-voices version on Dylan.

He takes another look at some of his own older songs. “Tomorrow Is A Long Time” is recast as a slow blues over a “Smokestack Lightnin’” riff, its wistfulness replaced by raw hurt. Other novelties include a harmonica intro to “Winterlude” and a lolloping Nashville-style full-band arrangement of “Song To Woody”. His inveterate fondness for trying songs in different time signatures reaches a bizarre peak in a version of “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues”, which he sings in 6/8 over a 4/4 rhythm section.

Those looking forward to the results of the May 1 session with George Harrison had better restrain their excitement. Lively versions of two Carl Perkins rockabilly songs, “Matchbox” and “Your True Love”, are the highlights of a session that it would be a kindness to describe as informal. There’s a Harrison guitar solo on “Time Passes Slowly” and his harmony can be heard on “All I Have To Do Is Dream”. Dylan’s respectful treatment of McCartney’s “Yesterday”, although marred by a missed chord change, is also from the Harrison session, but the guitar solo may be by an uncredited Ron Cornelius.

The return to New York turned out to be a mistake. “It was a really stupid thing to do,” Dylan said 15 years later. The hippie stalkers who had made the young family’s life a misery in Woodstock were now laying siege to his MacDougal Street home and the egregious AJ Weberman was rooting through his garbage. “Everything had changed,” he concluded. This music – transitional and provisional, both tentative and revealing, such a puzzle at the time – was his response.

A Velvet Underground playlist

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With the new issue of Uncut upon us we are delighted to bring you a Velvet Underground playlist of deep cuts to soundtrack this month's cover story - a veritable Exploding Publishing Inevitable, no less. Have a copy sent straight to your home. https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3xD0012eDxbRZ5v6...

With the new issue of Uncut upon us we are delighted to bring you a Velvet Underground playlist of deep cuts to soundtrack this month’s cover story – a veritable Exploding Publishing Inevitable, no less.

Have a copy sent straight to your home.

“Prominent Men”
Peel Slowly And See (Polydor, 1995)
Lou Reed would often downplay Dylan’s influence in later years, but this early acoustic Velvets number certainly bears the unmistakable imprint of Bob. Recorded in mid-1965 at John Cale’s Ludlow Street Loft, it’s practically a Freewheelin’ outtake, with wheezy harmonica, earnestly anti-establishment lyrics and a Reed vocal that earns the Dylan-esque sobriquet. Despite its deeply derivative nature, it’s more charming than you’d expect, offering up a weird alternate universe where Reed never met Cale or Warhol and became just another Greenwich Village folkie.

“Miss Joanie Lee”
Velvet Underground and Nico, 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition (Polydor, 2012)
“One chord is fine. Two chords is pushing it. Three chords and you’re into jazz.” Reed took his minimalist ethos to its logical extreme with “Miss Joanie Lee”, a brutal thud that makes “Run Run Run” sound like Steely Dan. The 10-minute boogie was captured during a rehearsal in early 1966 at Warhol’s Factory and then never heard from again. But it’s a blast, occupying that no man’s land between Bo Diddley and Sonic Youth, with impossibly raw guitars crashing up against Reed and Cale’s lusty harmonies.

“Melody Laughter”
Velvet Underground and Nico, 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition (Polydor, 2012)
“Twenty-nine minutes of torture” is how Moe Tucker described this freeform excursion, recorded live by an audience member in Ohio in late 1966. Her pain is our pleasure, however. “Melody Laughter” is a thrilling example of the VU at their most sonically adventurous, with Tucker’s proto-motorik thump providing a sturdy bedrock for the rest of the gang (Nico included) to make some terrific noise. When it all comes together towards the end, it’s as beautiful as it gets — the Exploding Plastic Inevitable in all its bizarro glory.

“It Was A Pleasure Then”
Chelsea Girl (Verve, 1967)
A disquieting, skeletal drift, “It Was A Pleasure Then” sticks out like a sore thumb amidst the lush flutes-‘n’-strings of Nico’s Chelsea Girl debut. It’s not officially a part of the VU canon, but it may as well be; Nico’s accompaniment here is none other than John Cale and Lou Reed. As her comrades rumble menacingly behind her, Nico sings obliquely of lost innocence and “shattered minds.” A preview of her darker work to come — and a tantalizing glimpse of unrealized collaborations between this combustible trio.

“I’m Not A Young Man Anymore”
White Light / White Heat 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition (Polydor, 2013)
Recorded at NYC’s Gymnasium during a long 1967 residency, “I’m Not A Young Man Anymore” was unknown to all but the most hardcore of VU fanatics until it surfaced on a bootleg in the mid-2000s. It’s definitely a rough draft, with Reed repeating a simple lyric over and over, perhaps waiting for inspiration to strike. But despite this sketchiness, the Velvets transform it into something magical and hypnotic, a rough-edged R&B number bolstered by Sterling Morrison’s monomaniacal guitar figure, going round and round into infinity.

“Guess I’m Falling In Love”
White Light / White Heat 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition (Polydor, 2013)
The VU attempted “Guess I’m Falling In Love” during the White Light / White Heat sessions but for some reason Reed neglected to record his vocal. This live version, also taped live at the Gymnasium, will do nicely, though, offering righteously heavy choogle from start to finish. Once again, Morrison is the star, stepping out from the shadows to deliver two absolutely ripping (yet somehow quite elegant) solos, landing somewhere between Chuck Berry and Steve Cropper. If Verve had released it as a single, this tune might’ve been the Velvet’s mainstream breakthrough.

“Countess From Hong Kong”
Peel Slowly and See (Polydor, 1995)
A slinky and seductive number from late 1969, “Countess From Hong Kong” got lost somewhere between the band’s self-titled third LP and Loaded, only existing as a hazy demo. But it’s well-worth discovering, thanks to Reed and Morrison’s delicately interlocking guitars and a coy vocal from Lou. The song also features the return of the harmonica to the VU arsenal — a surprisingly successful addition that adds to the dreamy atmosphere. If that riff sounds familiar, it’s because Beck borrowed it lock-stock-and-barrel for his “Beautiful Way” 30 years later.

“Over You”
The Matrix Tapes (Polydor/Universal, 2015)
Like “Countess”, “Over You” is the rare Velvets cast-off that Reed didn’t eventually dust off for his solo career. It’s hard to see why he left it behind; with its chiming guitars, sugary melody and lovelorn lyrics, Lou could’ve slotted it somewhere on Transformer or Coney Island Baby. As it stands, we only have a few live recordings to go by, all of which include sparkling Morrison solos. Reed often introduced it as his “Billie Holiday song” and you can imagine Lady Day singing along.

“Follow The Leader”
The Quine Tapes (Polydor/Universal, 2001)
We have guitarist Robert Quine to thank for this one. As a young Velvets fanatic, he lugged a tape recorded to a number of the band’s late 1969 San Francisco club dates, preserving several unique moments for posterity. While it may have been performed on the west coast, the positively danceable “Follow The Leader” sees Reed looking – as always – towards his beloved NYC. “New York! New York City!” he chants over a proto-disco groove that stretches out hypnotically over the course of 17 minutes.

“Friends”
Squeeze (Polydor, 1973)
Is it sacrilege to include a song from Squeeze, the much-maligned post-Lou VU album? Maybe. A Doug Yule solo effort in all but name, the LP has a bad rep — deservedly in some cases. But this bittersweet McCartney-esque ballad is a keeper, with Yule singing about puppy love in his soft, quivery “Candy Says” voice. It’s a million miles away from “Sister Ray”, but that’s alright. There’s even a Squeeze reappraisal in the works: Velvets disciples Luna recently covered “Friends”, giving it an appropriately lovely soft rock sheen.

Hear a track from Tony Allen’s final studio album, There Is No End

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Tony Allen's final studio album There Is No End will be released by Decca France on April 30 – a year to the day after his passing. It features rappers such as Danny Brown, Jeremiah Jae and Sampa The Great laying down their rhymes over beats recorded by Allen before he died. “Tony's idea was ...

Tony Allen’s final studio album There Is No End will be released by Decca France on April 30 – a year to the day after his passing.

It features rappers such as Danny Brown, Jeremiah Jae and Sampa The Great laying down their rhymes over beats recorded by Allen before he died. “Tony’s idea was to give rappers the space to breathe and freely create,” says producer Vincent Taeger. “He wanted really not to just do Afrobeat, but rather something new and open, with very different sounds for the drums for each song and feels and tempos that were really grounded to the core in hip-hop.”

The one song on the album that was recorded live with all the main instruments playing together was the single “Cosmosis”, featuring Damon Albarn, Skepta and novelist Ben Okri. Listen below:

Ben Okri wrote the lyrics “in a way as a tribute to Tony because it was written to ask, ‘How do you absorb a cosmos or integrate a cosmos, enrich a world, infiltrate in the highest possible way and change the mentalverse, the spiritverse – it’s by cosmosis.’

“This man could have lived another 150 years and kept creating new worlds,” continues Okri. “He had become the master shaman of his art. He knew himself and his mind. He wanted the album to be open to the energies of a new generation… but like a great mathematician or scientist who found a code of for a new world, with just a few beats, he created this extraordinary canvas.”

Paul McCartney announces McCartney III Imagined

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Paul McCartney has announced the release of McCartney III Imagined, featuring the likes of Beck, Josh Homme, Damon Albarn, St Vincent, Massive Attack, Phoebe Bridgers, Khruangbin and Radiohead's Ed O'Brien covering or reworking songs from last year's McCartney III. Watch a video for Dominic Fike'...

Paul McCartney has announced the release of McCartney III Imagined, featuring the likes of Beck, Josh Homme, Damon Albarn, St Vincent, Massive Attack, Phoebe Bridgers, Khruangbin and Radiohead’s Ed O’Brien covering or reworking songs from last year’s McCartney III.

Watch a video for Dominic Fike’s version of “The Kiss Of Venus” below:

Peruse the full tracklisting and artwork for McCartney III Imagined below:

1. Find My Way (feat. Beck)
2. The Kiss of Venus (Dominic Fike)
3. Pretty Boys (feat. Khruangbin)
4. Women And Wives (St. Vincent Remix)
5. Deep Down (Blood Orange Remix)
6. Seize The Day (feat. Phoebe Bridgers)
7. Slidin’ (EOB Remix)
8. Long Tailed Winter Bird (Damon Albarn Remix)
9. Lavatory Lil (Josh Homme)
10. When Winter Comes (Anderson .Paak Remix)
11. Deep Deep Feeling (3D RDN Remix)
12. Long Tailed Winter Bird (Idris Elba Remix)*
* Physical release exclusive track

McCartney III Imagined is released digitally on April 16 via Capitol Records, with physical versions to follow in the summer. Pre-order here.

Crystal Palace Bowl to reopen with shows by Supergrass and Max Richter

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Famous outdoor London venue the Crystal Palace Bowl is to be reactivated this summer with a series of 12 concerts in August. The first headliners for South Facing Festival include Supergrass, Max Richter, The Streets, Dizzee Rascal & The Outlook Orchestra and English National Opera (performing To...

Famous outdoor London venue the Crystal Palace Bowl is to be reactivated this summer with a series of 12 concerts in August.

The first headliners for South Facing Festival include Supergrass, Max Richter, The Streets, Dizzee Rascal & The Outlook Orchestra and English National Opera (performing Tosca), with more to be announced soon. The festival will also include a series of free midweek events for the whole community.

Over the years, Crystal Palace Bowl has hosted memorable outdoor shows by the likes of Bob Marley, Pink Floyd, Rod Stewart, The Cure, Pixies, Ian Dury and Curtis Mayfield. However, the oxidised steel structure overlooking a lake in Crystal Palace park had lain dormant for most of this century before being revived by a crowdfunding campaign.

See the full dates for the first wave of South Facing Festival shows below and sign up to the ticket presale here. Early bird tickets start at £35 plus booking fee.

SATURDAY 14 AUGUST
Dizzee Rascal & The Outlook Orchestra

FRIDAY 20 AUGUST
Supergrass

SATURDAY 21 AUGUST
The Streets

SATURDAY 28 AUGUST
Max Richter

FRIDAY 27 & SUNDAY 29 AUGUST
English National Opera (performing Tosca)

Pink Floyd to release Live At Knebworth 1990

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Pink Floyd's headline set from 1990's Silver Clef Award Winners charity concert at Knebworth will be released as an album by Warner Music on April 30. The show was previously released on 2019’s Later Years box set, but is now available as a standalone album on double vinyl, CD and digital platf...

Pink Floyd’s headline set from 1990’s Silver Clef Award Winners charity concert at Knebworth will be released as an album by Warner Music on April 30.

The show was previously released on 2019’s Later Years box set, but is now available as a standalone album on double vinyl, CD and digital platforms for the first time, entitled Live At Knebworth 1990.

The Knebworth concert, which was broadcast globally on MTV at the time, found Pink Floyd topping an all-star bill that included Paul McCartney, Dire Straits, Genesis, Phil Collins, Mark Knopfler, Robert Plant (with Jimmy Page), Cliff Richard, Eric Clapton and Tears For Fears.

“There is something special about Knebworth,” says Nick Mason. “We all still have fond memories of playing there in the ’70s, and this show was no different. As a North London boy this was almost a home game, but with the added delight of being the re-assembly of the band after a fairly mega tour that had lasted for well over a year. It was also an opportunity to get  the wonderful Candy Dulfer to play – I had been a fan of hers for quite a while, and it was just a shame we didn’t have an opportunity to utilise her for more. We also had our dear friend Michael Kamen guesting. Michael had contributed so much to PF over the previous ten years, it’s great to have something of his playing on the recording.”

David Gilmour and Andy Jackson have remixed the audio for all seven tracks performed on the day, and the album features new artwork shot by Floyd collaborator Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell of Hipgnosis and designed by Peter Curzon of Storm Studios.

Check out the artwork and LP tracklisting below, and pre-order here.

Disc 1 Side A
1 Shine On You Crazy Diamond, Parts 1-5
2 The Great Gig In The Sky
Disc 1 Side B
1 Wish You Were Here
2 Sorrow
 
Disc 2 Side C
1 Money
Disc 2 Side D
1 Comfortably Numb
2 Run Like Hell

Courtney Barnett launches online archive of live shows

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Courtney Barnett has launched an extensive online archive, featuring previously unreleased video and audio of numerous live performances. The archive documents every show she's ever played, going all the way back to an open mic night at The Lark Distillery in Hobart in 2007. Many of the gig list...

Courtney Barnett has launched an extensive online archive, featuring previously unreleased video and audio of numerous live performances.

The archive documents every show she’s ever played, going all the way back to an open mic night at The Lark Distillery in Hobart in 2007. Many of the gig listings are accompanied by posters, photos or free-to-view video footage. Browse the archive here.

It also includes the premiere of Barnett’s only full-band show of 2020, an Australian bushfire fundraiser at Melbourne’s Corner Hotel. Watch that below:

Exclusive! Watch a video for Israel Nash’s new single, “Southern Coasts”

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Israel Nash's Uncut-approved new album Topaz is due out this Friday (March 12) on Loose. Watch a video for the track "Southern Coasts" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJbRNq18PmU Nash describes “Southern Coasts” as both "driving and lazy, like the waves that keep coming but also ...

Israel Nash’s Uncut-approved new album Topaz is due out this Friday (March 12) on Loose.

Watch a video for the track “Southern Coasts” below:

Nash describes “Southern Coasts” as both “driving and lazy, like the waves that keep coming but also urge us to relax.” Along with the rest of Topaz, it was recorded in the Quonset hut studio he built about 600 feet from his house in the Texas Hill Country. “It’s allowed me to capture sounds and ideas, to really get stuff out of my head and into the world so quickly,” he says.

You can read much more from Israel Nash across six pages in the April 2021 issue of Uncut, which is still in shops now or available to order online by clicking here.

Bobby Gillespie announces memoir, Tenement Kid

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Bobby Gillespie has announced that his memoir Tenement Kid will be published by White Rabbit on October 28. Structured in four parts, the books focuses on Gillespie's early years growing up in Glasgow, forming Primal Scream and joining The Jesus And Mary Chain. It concludes with the release of th...

Bobby Gillespie has announced that his memoir Tenement Kid will be published by White Rabbit on October 28.

Structured in four parts, the books focuses on Gillespie’s early years growing up in Glasgow, forming Primal Scream and joining The Jesus And Mary Chain. It concludes with the release of the epochal Screamadelica and its subsequent tour.

“The publisher Lee Brackstone has been hassling me for years to write a book,” says Gillespie. “I always rebuffed him with some excuse or the other. At the beginning of 2020 I wanted to challenge myself creatively and do something I had never done before. I didn’t want to write another rock record, I’d done plenty of those, so I decided to write a memoir of my early life and worked on it all through the summer, Autumn and Winter of 2020 and here it is. It is titled Tenement Kid as I spent the first ten years of my life living in one. I am very proud of it. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I did writing it.”

Tenement Kid will be published by in hardback, ebook, White Rabbit Collector’s Edition and audio.

Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to The Fall

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Buy the Ultimate Music Guide to The Fall here – with no delivery charge to the UK! Shortly before I am introduced to Mark E Smith in early 1998, his press officer tells me that whatever I might have heard lately, The Fall is still in robust professional condition. He does this by clapping me ro...

Buy the Ultimate Music Guide to The Fall here – with no delivery charge to the UK!

Shortly before I am introduced to Mark E Smith in early 1998, his press officer tells me that whatever I might have heard lately, The Fall is still in robust professional condition. He does this by clapping me round the shoulder and saying, in an approximation of Smith’s north Manchester accent, words which have endured longer than anyone might ever have expected. Musicians come and go, Smith has recently told his PR, but “if it’s me and your granny on bongos, then it’s a Fall gig.”

It’s hung around, this line – speaking perhaps to the affection Fall fans have for the idea of Smith as a person of singular will, and his comic disdain for the other musicians in The Fall. There was also something about it which suggested he was indestructible, that whatever happened, he would always be around: a new Fall LP in the works, a new set of lyrics to revel in, and new cultural irritations to be despatched in a free-roaming pub interview.

All of which made Mark’s death in January 2018 particularly sad; the passing too soon of an utterly original talent, whose music – surprising, dense, literate, tuneful, impenetrable, funny – was so much a direct result of this personality and charisma. Mark and the music press were a gift to each other, and in this latest Ultimate Music Guide, alongside deep new appreciations of The Fall’s records, you’ll find a selection of some of his best interviews.

As time went on, he remained on his guard in these, wary that his witheringly unique take on the world could turn him into a known quantity. “Don’t think you’re talking to Paul Weller or somebody,” he said to me at one point when we first met. He also made a couple of remarks about what I looked like and what I was wearing, which at the time possibly obscured for me the point he was trying to make.

Namely that he was always one step ahead; eager to deflect from himself, and too smart to be imprisoned by his public image. For all his forthright opinion, Mark kept the important part of himself to himself. When we met again years later, I wondered, given his interest in prose writing, if there would ever be a Mark E Smith memoir. He was dismissive of the idea. “They’ll never get a true book out of me,” he said, proudly.

That enigmatic fog feels key to what Smith and The Fall did. His best work didn’t deal in fantasies, but processed the world to leave it with the magic of an espionage story – codes and aliases, locked doors, missing pieces. Everyone has their own Fall. And as someone told me when I was preparing this magazine, there’s always the fear that someone knows more about it than you.

This latest Ultimate Music Guide is an effort to make sense of, and revel in The Fall’s extraordinary world. Fall scholarship extends to vast online libraries of footnotes, talk and conjecture, which proliferates like tangential thoughts within MES’s brain. Though he himself was apparently no fan of the speculations of, as he put it, “old Fall fellas”.

Uncut met MES for the last time in autumn 2017, but if he was embattled (ex-wife Brix was playing with ex-Fall members), he remained inspired by his earliest influences: the Vorticists, original thinking, noise.

“In their own heads,” Mark told Uncut’s Tom Pinnock about Fall members past, “Mark’s just the drunken singer who didn’t know what he was doing. They seriously believe it!”

We only have this excerpt. But hopefully, this magazine will help you piece together what really went on there.

It’s in shops from Thursday (March 11) or you can buy a copy online by clicking here – with free P&P for the UK.

The Fall – The Ultimate Music Guide

Check the record! Presenting the Ultimate Music Guide to the visionary genius of The Fall. Every album reviewed! Guest appearances rated! Featuring encounters with hip priest Mark E Smith! The complete guide to the wonderful and frightening world of Britain's most original band. Buy a copy here!...

Check the record! Presenting the Ultimate Music Guide to the visionary genius of The Fall. Every album reviewed! Guest appearances rated! Featuring encounters with hip priest Mark E Smith! The complete guide to the wonderful and frightening world of Britain’s most original band.

Buy a copy here!

Send us your questions for Jason Pierce

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Next month, Spiritualized will launch the The Spaceman Reissue Program with a half-speed remaster of their 1992 debut, Lazer Guided Melodies. While bandleader Jason Pierce is in retrospective mode, we've managed to collar him to answer your questions for Uncut's next Audience With feature. Ove...

Next month, Spiritualized will launch the The Spaceman Reissue Program with a half-speed remaster of their 1992 debut, Lazer Guided Melodies.

While bandleader Jason Pierce is in retrospective mode, we’ve managed to collar him to answer your questions for Uncut’s next Audience With feature.

Over the course of 35 years in music, Pierce’s unyielding psychedelic vision has provided us with numerous moments of spiritual and emotional enlightenment, first with the perfect prescriptions of Spacemen 3, then with the celestial majesty of Spiritualized, not to mention various solo excursions into free jazz and soundtracks. He’s walked with Jesus, he’s floated in space and he’s survived an actual near-death experience as documented on 2008’s Songs In A&E… but as 2018’s mighty And Nothing Hurt proved, he’s still here, making soul-stirring, transformative music – a perfect miracle.

So what do you want to ask the dedicated musical cosmonaut otherwise known as J Spaceman? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Monday (March 15), and Jason will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Tom Petty’s Finding Wildflowers to get standalone release

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Tom Petty's Finding Wildflowers (Alternate Versions) will get a standalone release from Warner Records on April 16. The tracks were previously released on the Super Deluxe 9-LP version of 2020’s Wildflowers & All The Rest – read Uncut's review of that here – but will now be available on lim...

Tom Petty’s Finding Wildflowers (Alternate Versions) will get a standalone release from Warner Records on April 16.

The tracks were previously released on the Super Deluxe 9-LP version of 2020’s Wildflowers & All The Rest – read Uncut’s review of that here – but will now be available on limited-edition gold vinyl, CD and on all digital streaming platforms for the first time. A black vinyl release will follow on May 7.

Hear “You Saw Me Comin’ (Alternate Version)” below and pre-order the album here.